…it is better for the country to spend its resources on herbal remedies produced in Nigeria instead of spending huge amount of money to get the COVID Organics from Madagascar
The National Agency for Food Drugs and Administration Control (NAFDAC) says it has started working on coronavirus potential remedy drugs submitted by Nigerians.
The Director-General (DG) of the agency, Prof. Mojisola Adeyeye, made this known during a television programme on Tuesday.
Adeyeye explained that the submissions were made after the agency called for expression of interest for the COVID-19 related medicines from researchers and practitioners.
“I made a call for people to submit their application and I believe we have about three or four now and we are going to expedite the processing because it takes a while for us to go through the laboratory testing and what not but I have already given the directive to expedite.
“So, where we are right now is just to make sure that the information submitted is okay and by the end of the week, we may be sending these samples to the lab after we must have gone to inspect the site where the products are made because we don’t want a product that somebody will take and the person will start vomiting.
“So, we will go and inspect the site to make sure that whatever sample we are going to get must have been prepared in an environment that will not make the drug to compromise the health of the user.”
The NAFDAC DG, speaking further, said the four applications submitted would undergo “due diligence”.
Speaking on the criteria that a remedy must meet before it is presented to NAFDAC as a possible cure or drug, she said: “If somebody says he or she has a remedy for COVID, first of all, we want to know the history of the plant or the family the plant belongs to, background information on the botanical characteristics of the plant, we will also want to know whether the plant has been used for anything before because sometimes, we use one plant for several diseases and the usage will be different for a particular disease.
“We will also ask for any written or published document about the plant because the plant may not come from Nigeria and it may be available in other climes.
“So, we want to ensure that we get enough information and once that application is submitted with the information, then we will start the process and part of the process involves inspecting where the medicinal product was prepared to be sure that it is not going to compromise the health of the people.”
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She also pointed out that it is better for the country to spend its resources on herbal remedies produced in Nigeria instead of spending huge amount of money to get the COVID Organic from Madagascar.
In her reaction to the Madagascar COVID Organics and the request by Madagascar for Nigeria to pay over €170,000 on a drug that is yet to be validated, Adeyeye said, “I was made to understand that it has a plant called Artemisia and we have Artemisia in Nigeria which is an anti-malaria plant.”
“I believe that it is better for us to spend the money in clinical trials on our own product than to spend that money on COVID Organics. That does not mean that we will not check the safety in NAFDAC. We will do all the due diligence because we do that anyway for any product that is submitted to us.
“We give two-year approval if everything is okay with that product and we will do that with COVID Organic but in terms of a clinical trial, it takes a longer time for a clinical trial because first; you have to have a hospital that its ethics board have to review the protocol that is submitted and once the hospital is okay with the clinical protocol, it has to come to NAFDAC, where we will do our own due diligence in terms of the clinical protocol.
“So, it takes a while to get all these through and you have to also look for COVID patient and that is another logistics that may take time. So, that is why it is better for us to use that money to do our own local herbal medicine that may have the same effect,” she said